Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, Iowa State University, Ames, IA 50011, USA.
Office of New Animal Drug Evaluation, Center for Veterinary Medicine, Food and Drug Administration, Rockville, MD 20852, USA.
Cells. 2023 Apr 27;12(9):1269. doi: 10.3390/cells12091269.
A key component of efforts to identify the biological and drug-specific aspects contributing to therapeutic failure or unexpected exposure-associated toxicity is the study of drug-intestinal barrier interactions. While methods supporting such assessments are widely described for human therapeutics, relatively little information is available for similar evaluations in support of veterinary pharmaceuticals. There is, therefore, a critical need to develop novel approaches for evaluating drug-gut interactions in veterinary medicine. Three-dimensional (3D) organoids can address these difficulties in a reasonably affordable system that circumvents the need for more invasive in vivo assays in live animals. However, a first step in developing such systems is understanding organoid interactions in a 2D monolayer. Given the importance of orally administered medications for meeting the therapeutic need of companion animals, we demonstrate growth conditions under which canine-colonoid-derived intestinal epithelial cells survive, mature, and differentiate into confluent cell systems with high monolayer integrity. We further examine the applicability of this canine-colonoid-derived 2D model to assess the permeability of three structurally diverse, passively absorbed β-blockers (e.g., propranolol, metoprolol, and atenolol). Both the absorptive and secretive apparent permeability () of these drugs at two different pH conditions were evaluated in canine-colonoid-derived monolayers and compared with that of Caco-2 cells. This proof-of-concept study provides promising preliminary results with regard to the utility of canine-derived organoid monolayers for species-specific assessments of therapeutic drug passive permeability.
研究药物-肠道屏障相互作用是确定导致治疗失败或意外暴露相关毒性的生物学和药物特异性因素的努力的一个关键组成部分。虽然支持此类评估的方法广泛应用于人体治疗药物,但支持兽医药物的类似评估的信息相对较少。因此,迫切需要开发用于评估兽医药物肠道相互作用的新方法。三维 (3D) 类器官可以在一个合理负担得起的系统中解决这些困难,该系统避免了在活体动物中进行更具侵入性的体内测定的需要。然而,开发此类系统的第一步是了解 2D 单层中的类器官相互作用。鉴于口服药物对于满足伴侣动物的治疗需求的重要性,我们展示了犬结肠衍生的肠上皮细胞在高单层完整性的情况下存活、成熟和分化为融合细胞系统的生长条件。我们进一步研究了这种犬结肠衍生的 2D 模型在评估三种结构不同的被动吸收的 β 阻断剂(例如普萘洛尔、美托洛尔和阿替洛尔)渗透性方面的适用性。在两种不同 pH 条件下,在犬结肠衍生的单层中评估了这些药物的吸收和分泌表观渗透系数(),并与 Caco-2 细胞进行了比较。这项概念验证研究提供了有希望的初步结果,表明犬源性类器官单层在用于评估治疗药物被动渗透性的种特异性方面具有潜在的应用价值。